May 18, 2015
By
Riley McDermid
and
Alex Keown
, BioSpace.com Breaking News Staff
Perennial biotech venture capital favorites
Third Rock Ventures
has joined the scrum of companies jockeying for a presence in white-hot biotech real estate market Cambridge, Mass., saying Monday it is looking at
Vertex Pharmaceuticals
’ former 340,000 square foot facility.
BioSpace
reported Friday
that the property will be re-developed to host a number of smaller biotech startups.
Third Rock
will take advantage of that startup-friendly hatchery, it said, telling
Beta Boston
that “new master space agreement that can fit multiple companies over time,” but that it is “not a done deal yet.”
The area, which includes three buildings, will be rebranded as
Sidney Research Campus
by
BioMed Realty Trust
, which owns the buildings.
Vertex
vacated the space in 2013 when it moved a few miles into Boston. In addition to the Boston area,
BioMed Realty
, which focuses on life science and biotech properties, works in core U.S. life science markets including San Francisco, San Diego, Maryland, New York/New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Seattle.
Bill Kane
,
BioMed
’s vice president, told the
Boston Business Journal
last week that smaller biotech companies are finding it difficult to acquire space that meets their needs. Out of the 36 companies seeking lab space in Cambridge, 28 company officials said they were looking for “80,000 square feet of space or less.”
BioMed
is converting some of the space to “universal flex labs” which will be able to expand to meet the demands of the biotech companies as they grow.
The new site already has its first tenant lined up.
RaNA Therapeutics
, a 25-employee preclinical biotech headed by
Ron Renaud
, the former CEO of
Idenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
, will move in in September, the Journal reported. More tenants are expected to be announced later this year. In
2013 RaNa inked a deal
with Denmark-based
Santaris Pharma A/S
to use
Santaris
’ Locked Nucleic Acid (LNA) technology to develop RNA-targeted medicines.
The greater Boston metropolitan area continues to lead the way as the hub of the east coast’s pharmaceutical and biotech industries. More companies, such as
IBM Corporation
’s
IBM’s new Watson Health Unit
, or Beryllium, locate their headquarters and satellite offices to the area.
One of the reasons for the greater Boston area becoming such a major hub in the biotech and pharmaceutical industries is the plethora of research universities in the area. Boston also has one of the highest educated workforces in the nation.
Not only are smaller companies calling the Boston area home, but many larger and established pharmaceutical companies, such as
Pfizer Inc.
,
GlaxoSmithKline
,
Takeda Pharmaceuticals
,
Sanofi
,
Biogen Idec, Inc.
and
Novartis AG
have presences in the city. The close proximity of so many pharmaceutical and university laboratories provides researchers and scientists easy access to clinical studies and building partnerships between companies.
Another large former pharmaceutical space that is drawing attention is
Merck & Co.
’s former 1 million-square-foot headquarters in Whitehouse Station, N.J. The site is reportedly under contract, but the perspective buyers names have yet to be revealed. There have been rumors that
Google Inc.
is interested in the site, but there is currently no evidence to support those rumors.
Merck
put the Whitehouse Station building and a portion of its 1,000 acre campus on the market in 2013 as part of an
initiative
to sharpen the company’s commercial and research and development programs, as well as a reduction in operating costs.
Merck
had been headquartered in Whitehouse Station since 1992. Prior to that, the company was based in Rahway, N.J.
In April Massachusetts-based
Biogen, Inc.
said it will stay in Cambridge for the long term, after biotech leasing company
BioMed Realty Trust, Inc.
announced Thursday that it just signed a 10-year lease with the biotech for approximately 80,000 square feet of Class A laboratory and office space at the company’s 301 Binney Street property.
The company said in a statement that it has leased the entire fifth floor of the office and lab building to
Biogen
, which put it at full capacity for the 417,000-square-foot property.
Biogen
will now join neighbors
Ironwood Pharmaceuticals
and
Living Proof
.
“
BioMed Realty
is pleased to welcome
Biogen
to our growing list of tenants in Cambridge, and we look forward to building a long relationship with such a strong player in the Kendall Square research community,” said
Bill Kane
, Senior Vice President for
BioMed Realty
in Boston/Cambridge.
Biogen
focuses on creating therapies for neurological, autoimmune and hematologic disorders.
BioMed
said the company will use the new space “to expand its drug discovery efforts in this core life science district,” adding it is one of the “largest and fastest growing” global life science companies based in Massachusetts.
In February, Third Rock announced it is doubling down on synthetic chemistry, announcing that it has poured $45 million into a Series A round for startup
Revolution Medicines
in attempt to get in early on antifungal, complex molecular technology.
Revolution
said it will use the money to build out its 12-employee business, currently based in Redwood City, Calif., as well as focus on building its pipeline of antifungal drugs centered around the reengineered version of potent agent amphotericin B.
The new company boasts a high-pro board, including board chairman,
Martin D. Burke
, professor of chemistry at the
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
, and early career scientist of the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute
.
Revolution
said in a press release that Burke invented a “transformative method for synthesizing original compounds that are pharmaceutically optimized analogues of complex natural products.” As such, the company has inked an exclusive license agreement with the University of Illinois to practice and expand this technology, and is pursuing a rapid clinical development path with its lead antifungal program that originated in Burke’s laboratory.
“With this major advance in chemical synthesis, we now have the opportunity to unlock the full medical benefits of natural products that have been selected through a billion years of evolutionary pressure,” said
Revolution Medicines
CEO
Mark Goldsmith
.
“Marty is a remarkably inventive chemical biologist, and
Revolution Medicines
is working closely with him in his role as scientific advisory board chairman to exploit his breakthroughs for industrial-scale drug discovery through redesigning complex molecules,” he added. “Our strategy should produce high-impact treatments for serious infections and non-infectious diseases, among them our lead product candidates for patients with life-threatening fungal infections.”
Amphotericin B has long spooked scientists because of its propensity for liver damage as a side effect, but
Revolution
told the
San Francisco Business Times
that it has found a way to filter out toxic side effects while keeping it effective against disease.
“That’s a remarkable advance, empowered by the synthetic chemistry platform,”
Goldsmith
, who is also a partner at
Third Rock
, said “Without the technology, that work would not have been possible.”
That particular brand of fiddling with complex molecules in an attempt to synthesize the perfect therapeutic approach will be a hallmark of
Revolution
’s scientific approach, Goldsmith told the paper.
“That complexity is there for a reason,” Goldsmith said. “Now we can harness that complexity and convert interesting molecules into interesting drug candidates. We do think the opportunity is enormous.”
Will AbbVie, Genentech’s New Cancer Drug Be a Game Changer?
A promising new blood cancer therapy from
AbbVie
and
Genentech
that snagged headlines in early December for unexpectedly high rates of response in clinical trial patients has now been granted breakthrough status from the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
, the companies said last week. The investigational drug, dubbed venetoclax, is an inhibitor of the B-cell lymphoma-2 (BCL-2) protein that is being developed by
Abbvie
in partnership with
Genentech
and
Roche
. BioSpace wants to know what you think this means for the broader market—and could venetoclax be a game changer?
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